A new interactive platform driven by AI allows Executive Education participants at Cambridge Judge Business School to chat electronically with the CEO, CFO and other top executives of a fictional battery-making company.
Explore our scholarship and loan opportunities.
Search our portfolio of over 40 well-crafted programmes that will expand your skills and understanding in service of your organisational, personal development and career objectives.
Our faculty on the innovative role of business schools, how science fiction can inform the future and the hype and reality of AI.
We have faculty, who can speak on many current UK and global issues, and are happy to be contacted by journalists.
We have faculty, who can speak on many current UK and global issues, and are happy to be contacted by journalists.
The iconic Lecture Theatre 1 (LT1) is due for a refurbishment, and with it comes the opportunity for alumni, friends and other supporters of Cambridge Judge Business School to claim their seat in LT1.

Ruth Newkeen
We caught up with MBA alumna Toni Thorne and asked her about the triple jump, her year in finance at JP Morgan and where her MBA Star Award has taken her this past year. Read more

Ruth Newkeen
The UK needs an ‘Independent Office for Innovation and Industrial Policy’ similar to the Office for Budget Responsibility, says submission by Cambridge Judge Business School expert at the request of the House of Commons Select Committee on Science and Technology. Read more

Charles Goldsmith
Public sentiment on social media (including fear, sadness and anger) is highly reactive to global policy actions, finds study co-authored at Cambridge Judge Business School based on more than 250,000 tweets over a 13-year period. Read more

Ruth Newkeen
Digital tech can be turned into a tool for sustainable and equitable practices in agriculture, industry and other sectors, says new report co-authored by Lucia Reisch of Cambridge Judge Business School. Read more

Ruth Newkeen
Whichever way you look at it, the London Stock Exchange is in secular decline. The number of companies listed on the exchange’s Main Market has fallen from over 4,400 in the early 1960s to less than 1,200 now. Read more
